“If you’re not loyal to your fellow man, you’re an animal.”—Pike, The Wild Bunch
“America doesn’t have many myths. The one myth we have is the Western.”—film director John Carpenter
As long as there are movies, there will be Westerns. A love letter to a time in America when heroes loomed large and men (and women) lived and died by a strict code of ethics, the Western genre never seems to wear out its welcome, re-appearing in the box office in one form or another every few years. Sometimes it’s a remake of a classic, as was the case with the Coen brothers’ 2010 nod to
True Grit. Sometimes it’s a comic send-up to the best of the Wild West, as offered up by Mel Brooks in
Blazing Saddles or the animated
Rango. And then there are the movies that disguise themselves as sci-fi or horror but are Westerns at heart, such as the
Star Wars epics and many of the films of John Carpenter, an avowed fan of the Western whose influence can be seen in everything from his
The Thing to
Vampires.
- Monday, February 18, 2013